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Protease
From Proteopedia
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Another class of protease is aspartate proteases. This family includes [[HIV protease]]. HIV produces its proteins as one long chain; HIV protease cleaves the long protein into functional units. Because it cleaves long proteins, it has a <scene name='HIV-1_protease/2nmz_tunnel/1'>tunnel</scene> to accommodate the long peptide substrate, and the top "flaps" of the protein can <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Hiv_tunnel_morph_flaps/2'>open and close</scene>to allow the substrate in and products out. Aspartate proteases include <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Catalytic_asp/1'>two aspartate</scene> residues in the active site, which increase the reactivity of an active site <scene name='31/315240/Saquinavir_cat_water/2'>water</scene> molecule to directly cleave the substrate protein. | Another class of protease is aspartate proteases. This family includes [[HIV protease]]. HIV produces its proteins as one long chain; HIV protease cleaves the long protein into functional units. Because it cleaves long proteins, it has a <scene name='HIV-1_protease/2nmz_tunnel/1'>tunnel</scene> to accommodate the long peptide substrate, and the top "flaps" of the protein can <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Hiv_tunnel_morph_flaps/2'>open and close</scene>to allow the substrate in and products out. Aspartate proteases include <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Catalytic_asp/1'>two aspartate</scene> residues in the active site, which increase the reactivity of an active site <scene name='31/315240/Saquinavir_cat_water/2'>water</scene> molecule to directly cleave the substrate protein. | ||
| - | A third class of proteases are metalloproteases such as carboxypeptidase. Carboxypeptidases remove the C terminal amino acids from proteins. The active site contains | + | A third class of proteases are metalloproteases such as carboxypeptidase. Carboxypeptidases remove the C terminal amino acids from proteins. The active site contains <scene name='47/478539/Cv/2'>zinc</scene> , which is bound to the protein through interactions with histidine (H), serine (S) aspartic acid (E) residues. |
Revision as of 13:42, 20 April 2017
Proteases
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